The Metro Pulse reports on the struggles of a $6.3 million public and private development funded in part by HUD grants designed to create new social and economic opportunities in disadvantaged urban areas that opened in May 2006 anchored by an IGA grocery store and other retail and business outlets. The grocery store closed after eight months, and Wells Fargo Home Mortgage recently moved out leaving only a convenience store and a Knox County satellite office as tenants. Eternal Life Harvest Center, a church and service organization is set to move into IGA space offering some hope of salvaging something out of the original plan.
Knoxville Metro Pulse
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment